Here's the link to the steamer (about $200) and other products.... and advice.
STEAM: Your bed, boxsprings, furniture, anything YOU, (the BAIT) sit on for any length of time. STEAM will kill all 5 stages of life of the bedbugs. Best to get a large steamer, but if all you can’t afford is a $30 handheld one is better than nothing. Spray afterwards with ECO-RAIDER. This steamer is really good: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07C44DM6D/ref=redir\_mobile\_desktop?\_encoding=UTF8&aaxitk=59a6b473992bd5f7c54024e21f547235&hsa\_cr\_id=5637308130401&pd\_rd\_plhdr=t&pd\_rd\_r=2865fba2-eded-4641-8753-63772f8192d7&pd\_rd\_w=zM2Pc&pd\_rd\_wg=xvW8J&ref\_=sbx\_be\_s\_sparkle\_mcd\_asin\_0\_titleSPRAY BOTTLE: filled with the strongest ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL you can get. Works as a contact spray to kill all FIVE of the life stages of bedbugs, including eggs. Don’t spray large amounts of it on your mattress, or anywhere else, it’s a fire hazard. It will ruin latex paint. Pick your battles. You can also spray a bit in bags of laundry that you can’t wash right away. Speaking from experience, if you have no washer & dryer and have to go to the laundromat makes this much more difficult, so chin up, little soldier, you can do it! CONTRACTOR BAGS or Heavy Duty Garbage bags and Duct tape and Rubber Bands to Bag things up. TAPE, RUBBER BANDS AND SHARPIES: To label all the sealed up plastic bags with what you have in them, whether they are clean or dirty, whether they need to be steamed or washed or whatever. This will help you manage the chaos. Keep a clear plastic bag handy with these supplies in them so you can easily tote them around if you have to do laundry.SEAL OFF YOUR BODY: at night with tighter clothes, including socks because they can’t bite you through clothing. Tuck your shirt into your pajamas. If you have bites notice where they are. You can rub essential oil mixes like Lavender on your neck to repel them from biting you there. “Bug Shield” is a mix that can help, make sure to mix some drops in with some plain lotion to dilute it, because it’s very strong and can irritate your skin.APPLE CIDER VINEGAR AND GARLIC: Drinking a Tablespoon of Apple Cider Vinegar or eating a clove of raw garlic will make your body less tasty and help to keep them from biting you. Everything you can do to prevent further bites will help to keep them from advancing to the next stage of life and being able to mate and lay more eggs. MONITOR: Areas of your house with sticky traps to see your progress. Sticky traps are great to really see how small the nymphs are. They traps are handy, because there is a place to write when you put them out. You can put more out over time to see if the infestation is.getting worse or better. Give them at least two weeks before deciding they don’t work or that you don’t have any bedbugs. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002Y6JHES?psc=1&ref=ppx\_yo2\_dt\_b\_product\_detailsLURE: Them out of hiding by using yourself as bait and making homemade CO2 traps with yeast. Use the traps you make in rooms that you are NOT in. https://www.instructables.com/Easiest-Bed-Bug-Trap/ THEIR WEAKNESSES: They can’t advance to the next stage of life if they don’t get a blood meal and will starve in their younger stages in 3 months and die. You can starve these stages of life by quarantining off rooms and areas of your house with lines of diatomaceous earth. If you sleep or rest in these quarantined rooms, the furniture needs to have “Interceptors” and you need to keep your feet off the ground as much as possible while resting. They can’t lay eggs unless they get to the adult (5th) stage of life, and then they only lay about 1-5 eggs a day. They can’t fly or jump, only crawl and that is an advantage. Use the Diatomaceous Earth to block the infestation from spreading. They also can’t bite through clothing, so wear socks and clothes that cover most of your skin when your sleeping. LIFE CYCLE: TWO weeks for eggs to hatch and FIVE weeks from nymph to adulthood. THEIR STRENGTHS: The early stages (“nymph”) of life are so small they are almost invisible. A lot of people (50%) have no symptoms or signs when they get bitten by nymphs, so an infestation can get out of control while you are unaware of the problem. It’s also confusing when one person in the household has visible bites and other people don’t. The bites on the one person who shows symptoms can be mistaken for hives or something else.